Plot Synopsis (continued)
Soon
after when he returns to his office, the front door is being
freshly painted to read "Samuel Spade, Confidential Investigator." Effie
alerts Spade to a homosexual client who has just arrived in the
outer office and presented her with a gardenia-perfumed business
card. Spade sniffs the card - reacting with a bemused expression.
A strange, bug-eyed, shifty man - an effeminate, bow-tied Mr.
Joel Cairo (Peter Lorre) confronts Spade in his office. Cairo's
entry line refers to Archer's murder: "May a stranger offer
condolences for your partner's unfortunate death?" While
fondling his cane, Cairo also asks if there is any relationship
between Archer's and Thursby's death. He is searching for a statuette
of a black bird:
I'm trying to recover, an ornament that, ah,
shall we say has been mislaid...I thought and hoped you could
assist me. The ornament, ah, is a statuette, the black figure
of a bird...I am prepared to promise that - what is the phrase?
(He gestures knowingly) 'No questions will be asked!'
Cairo offers Spade the sum of $5,000 for the missing
bird's recovery on behalf of the figure's "rightful owner." (Spade
suspects that Brigid and Cairo are both connected pieces of the mystery.)
After Spade's secretary leaves the outer office for the night and
Spade has turned away, Cairo surprises and threatens Spade in his
office with a drawn gun:
You will please clasp your hands together at
the back of your neck. I intend to search your offices, Mr.
Spade. I warn you, if you attempt to prevent me, I shall certainly
shoot you.
While checking if Spade is armed, the slick Spade catches
Cairo off guard, easily disarms him and knocks him out cold with
one quick punch to the jaw. While Cairo is unconscious on the sofa,
Spade empties his pockets' contents:
- a Greek passport with Cairo's name and picture
- other passports - French and British
- an orchestra seat ticket to the Geary Theater in
San Francisco for the evening performance on Wednesday the 18th
(that evening)
- a wallet containing a wad of money
- a scented silk handkerchief (Spade smells it and
reacts quizzically)
- $5,000, the price that Cairo offers to pay, isn't
there ("It's just hooey!")
When Cairo regains consciousness, he looks at his face
in a mirror - but Spade's image is all that the mirror reflects.
Upset, Cairo whines that his shirt is ruffled ("Look what you
did to my shirt!"). Without missing a beat, Cairo re-states
his "genuine" offer to pay $5,000 for the figure's return,
but is bewildered by Spade's defense of his office space:
But if it isn't here, why did you risk serious
injury to prevent my searching for it?
Cairo apologizes for not divulging the identity of
the bird's owner or the statuette itself. Spade demands a retainer
(of $200.00, double Cairo's first offer) for assisting Cairo in locating
the bird:
Cairo: You will take, say, one hundred dollars?
Spade: No - I will take, say, two hundred dollars.
Spade denies having the black bird, or knowing where
it is (or where he can get it), but would agree to be hired, for
a profit, to "get it back, if possible, in an honest, lawful
way." Cairo informs Spade that he is staying at the Hotel Belvedere,
Room 635 and can be contacted there. As he prepares to leave, Cairo
tells Spade: "I sincerely expect the greatest mutual benefit
from our association."
And then Cairo immediately pulls the gun on Spade again
after his gun is returned. He persists in his demands to search Spade's
office for the much-desired black bird despite being roughed up: "Will
you please clasp your hands together at the back of your neck? I
intend to search your offices." Spade looks on in amusement,
laughing at him: "Why, sure. G - go ahead, I won't stop ya."
Later, after his encounter with Cairo, Spade leaves
his office in the Commercial Building [in the background behind him
is the Bailey Theatre marquee, playing The Great Lie (1941),
a film starring Oscar-winning Mary Astor]. On the street, he realizes
that he is being followed, but evades the young-faced thug (a trench-coated
gunman named Wilmer) by ducking away into another theatre lobby [advertising
the musical The Girl From Albany], taking off in a Yellow
Cab taxi, and eluding him in front of an apartment complex.
Spade
revisits Brigid in her hotel room (letting himself in with her key).
Brigid still appears fearful but cautious. After observing the shady
lady's behavior, she offers an understated confession of her base
nature - while still looking for sympathy from the shamus:
Spade: You, uh - you aren't exactly the sort
of a person you pretend to be, are ya?
Brigid: I'm not sure I know exactly what you mean.
Spade: The schoolgirl manner, you know, blushing, stammering,
and all that.
Brigid: I haven't lived a good life - I've been bad, worse than
you could know.
Spade: That's good, because if you actually were as innocent
as you pretend to be, we'd never get anywhere.
Brigid: I won't be innocent.
Spade: Good.
Spade isn't interested in her tantalizing, innocent
act and tries to pry more information out of her. Spade nonchalantly
tells her that he has met with Cairo whom he knows "only slightly." Brigid
nervously moves around the room as Spade watches her in amusement.
He laughingly tells the untrustworthy woman that he admires and appreciates
her ability to lie and deceive:
You're good. You're very good!
Brigid asks about Cairo and learns that he "offered
$5,000 for the black bird." She rises, in response. He knows
that she is concealing knowledge of the statuette: "You're not
gonna go around the room straightening things and poking the fire
again, are ya?" Spade considers the sum Cairo was willing to
pay "a lot of money." "Tis," replies Brigid with
a cynical, bitter tone - she doesn't have that much money.
It's more than I can ever offer you if I have
to bid for your loyalty.
Spade has heard enough from the duplicitous, vulnerable-acting
woman - he rises from his chair, completely frustrated by her lack
of forthcoming, trust and honesty:
Spade: That's good coming from you. What have
you ever given me beside money? Have you ever given me any
of your confidence, any of the truth? Haven't you tried to
buy my loyalty with money and nothing else?
Brigid (quivering): What else is there I can buy you with?
After seductively asking him what she can offer besides
money, Spade brutally takes her face in his hands and kisses her
roughly - he digs his thumbs into her cheeks. She accepts his lingering
kiss. Spade walks away, demanding more information if he is to be
the 'helpless' woman's protector:
I don't care what your secrets are. But I can't
go ahead without more confidence in you than I've got now.
You've got to convince me that you know what this is all about,
that you aren't just fiddling around, hoping that it will all
come out right in the end.
Brigid still pleads for his patience and for more time
("Can't you trust me a little longer?") - but reluctantly
agrees to speak to Joel Cairo. Spade phones and leaves a message
at Cairo's hotel to meet them in his apartment later that evening.
After a wipe left dissolve, they take a cab there. Brigid (wearing
the fur that she said she would pawn) and Spade walk by an expectant
Iva furtively waiting for him (the spectre of Miles' death trails
him everywhere) in a black convertible parked out front.
Still uneasy about the trust issue between them, Spade
clarifies things with Brigid. When the visit with Cairo has been
concluded, Spade is expecting to deal with her:
Brigid: You know I never would have placed myself
in this position if I didn't trust you completely.
Spade: That again?
Brigid: You know that's true, you know.
Spade: You don't have to trust me so long as you persuade me
to trust you. Don't worry about that now. He'll [Cairo] be along
any minute. You get your business with Cairo over with, then
we'll see how we stand.
When he peers out his apartment window through a blowing,
gauzy window curtain, he sees the diminutive hit-man who had followed
him earlier in the evening eye-ing his apartment from across the
street under a streetlamp. Brigid comes up to him and gushes:
Brigid: You are a god-send.
Spade: Oh, now don't overdo it.
Treasure-hunting Cairo joins them there, and notifies
Spade of a "boy" who is watching the apartment. Cairo greets
Brigid with false courtesy: "I'm delighted to see you again,
Madame." They talk about Cairo's $5,000 cash offer for the Maltese
Falcon and the bird's whereabouts. After admitting that she hasn't
"got the Falcon," Brigid promises that she will have it back
in about a week from where Floyd Thursby hid it. She claims that she
is selling the bird and disposing of it because she is fearful of the
bird's deadly trail and how it led to Thursby's murder:
Cairo: And why, if I may ask another question,
are you willing to sell it to me?
Brigid: Because I'm afraid. After what happened to Floyd, I'm
afraid to touch it except to turn it over to somebody else.
Cairo: What exactly did happen to Floyd?
Brigid (while knowingly shaking her head and looking down): 'The
Fat Man.'
As they guardedly discuss their past dealings with
references to the 'Fat Man,' Cairo gets tense when Brigid mentions
that the 'Fat Man' is in San Francisco and she gets excited when
he repeats a warning about "the boy outside" - two additional
pieces to the mysterious puzzle. Cairo and Brigid openly detest and
mutually insult each other [with hints of sexual bargaining and deviance]:
Brigid: But you might be able to get around him
[the boy], Joel, as you did the one in Istanbul, what was his
name?
Cairo: You mean the one you couldn't get to --!!
Brigid slaps Cairo hard - when he raises his hand to
slap her back and then draws his gun, Spade disarms him and the gun
drops to the floor. Cairo weakly protests: "This is the second time
that you've laid hands on me." Spade forcibly grabs Cairo and
slaps him three times:
When you're slapped, you'll take it and
like it!
Brigid reaches for the gun as they are interrupted
by loud knocking at the door and the sound of the buzzer. In the
hallway, Spade talks to police detectives Polhaus and Dundy in a
second after-hours call. The cops are there because an anonymous
phone-caller [later discovered to be Iva Archer] has informed them
that Spade was romantically involved with Iva - and killed Miles
to marry her:
There's talk going around about you and Archer's
wife...The talk is that she tried to get a divorce from him
so she could put in with you, and he wouldn't give it to her...There's
even talk that that's why he was put on the spot.
Dundy wants to ask hard-nosed questions - interrogation
that Spade deflects by blocking his door and pointing out that Thursby's
death destroys their theory:
Your first idea that I killed Thursby because
he killed Miles falls to pieces if you blame me for killing
Miles too.
As the police are about to leave after accusing Spade
of more "lying answers,"
they hear a scuffle inside and Cairo loudly screaming: "Help!" Spade
is forced to let the cops in when Cairo starts fighting with Brigid
- they barge into the apartment where a fracas between his two clients
is in progress. They witness a bloodied, whining Joel Cairo complaining
that Spade brutally entrapped him in the apartment where Brigid ("you
dirty filthy liar") attacked him and was threatening to kill him.
Dundy stands between the two antagonists as he listens to their conflicting
versions and explanations of what happened. When Brigid counter-accuses
Cairo of lying and then kicks him, Dundy threatens to run everyone
into the police station. To extricate them from a possible jailing,
Spade explains their rough interrogation of Cairo - a story consistent
with their somewhat limited knowledge:
Miss O'Shaughnessy is an operative in my employ
since yesterday...Cairo is an acquaintance of Thursby's. He
came into my office late this afternoon and hired me to find
something that Thursby was supposed to have on him when he
was bumped off. It, uh, looked funny to me, the way he put
it, so I wouldn't touch it. Then he pulled a gun on me. Well,
that's neither here nor there unless we start proffering charges
against each other. Anyway, Miss O'Shaughnessy and I discussed
the matter and we decided to find out exactly how much he knew
about Miles' and Thursby's killings so we asked him to come
up here. Now maybe we did put the questions to him a little
roughly. You know how that is, Lieutenant. But we didn't hurt
him enough to make him cry for help.
When the police detectives still threaten to haul them
away to jail, Spade further jokes that the theatrics were part of
a pre-conceived plan. He presses his explanation, exaggerating their
conflict and making an intimidated Cairo confess that his questioning
was all a joke:
Aw, don't you know that you're being kidded?...When
I heard the buzzer, I said to Miss O'Shaughnessy and Cairo
here, I said, 'There's the police again. They're getting to
be a nuisance. When you hear them going, one of you scream
and then we'll see how far along we can string 'em until they
tumble.'...Don't be a sap. That gun was a plant. It was one
of mine. Too bad it was only a .25 or maybe you could prove
that was the gun that Miles and Thursby were shot with.
Exasperated with Spade's impertinence and for being
set up with a fake fracas, Dundy is provoked to punch him. Both Brigid
and Cairo back Spade up, preferring not to press charges against
each other, since that would involve them further with the police
- and compromise their ability to swiftly search for the falcon.
Then, the bewildered police have no choice but to leave, even though
they want to get contact information for both Brigid and Cairo.
After Cairo slithers out and the cops depart, Brigid
butters Spade up with another seductive compliment - she is amazed
by his "high-handed" manner:
You're absolutely the wildest, most unpredictable
person I've ever known. Do you always carry on so high-handed?
Threatening that "the boy outside hasn't gone
home yet," Spade insistently presses the evasive Brigid for
more information about the bird statuette:
Hey, what's this bird, this falcon that everybody's
all steamed up about?
Uninterested in how the statue looks ("It's a
black figure as you know, smooth and shiny. A bird, a hawk, a falcon
about that high"), Spade is more interested in what makes it "so
important" to so many people. Brigid spins another tall tale
- she was offered the sum of 500 pounds to steal the bird in Turkey,
and Cairo and Thursby were in on the heist. However, she and Thursby
learned that Cairo had planned to desert them. To retaliate, Floyd
and Brigid double-crossed Cairo and took off with it. However, Floyd
had no intentions of keeping his promise to share the falcon equally
with her either.
Boldfacedly, Spade calls her a liar. Brigid wearily
admits that there isn't much truth in her yarn and lies back:
Spade: (smiling) You are a liar.
Brigid: I am. I've always been a liar.
Spade: Don't brag about it. Was there any truth at all in that
yarn?
Brigid: Some...not very much...Oh, I'm - I'm so tired, so tired
of lying and making up lies, not knowing what is a lie and what's
the truth. I wish... (Striking a sensual, languishing pose, she
reclines back on the couch)
As Spade bends over to kiss the femme fatale,
the curtains blow apart, revealing the perilous real-world outside
- the 'boy' gunman is still in a dark doorway across the street.
[Undoubtedly, they spend the night together, although the scene is
eliminated from the film.]
A direct cut displays the brass plaque of the Hotel
Belvedere - the next day. Spade enters the hotel, uses the desk phone
and asks to speak to Cairo. He spots the gunsel-tail again sitting
in a lobby chair facing away from him and reading a newspaper. He
hangs up the phone and sits down next to the 'boy' - Wilmer (Elisha
Cook, Jr.). [Wilmer is the quintessential caricature of the gangster
in 30s B films.] Deducing from the vague conversation between Brigid
and Cairo that the "boy" was hired by either the 'Fat Man'
or Cairo to follow him, he delivers a message to the gunsel's boss:
Where is he?...Cairo...You're gonna have to talk
to me before you're through, sonny. Some of you will. And you
can tell the 'Fat Man' I said so.
Incited to anger, Wilmer responds with "shove
off," and ineffectually threatens:
"Keep askin' for it and you're gonna get it, plenty. I
told you to shove off. Shove off." Spade reprimands him, telling
the young, insulting thug that he should be polite. He then signals
the house detective Luke (James Burke) to run Wilmer, wearing an oversized
overcoat, out of the hotel lobby:
"What do you let these cheap gunmen hang around the lobby for,
with their heaters bulging in their clothes?" As Wilmer is rousted
out, Spade blows smoke in his face.
Just then, a beaten-up, disheveled and tired Cairo
returns to the hotel lobby [Cairo was booked and interrogated by
police at the police station after leaving Spade's apartment]. Spade
confronts him and explains his motives:
Spade: Let's go someplace where we can talk.
Cairo: No, no, no. Our private conversations have not been such
that I'm anxious to continue them. Forgive my speaking so
bluntly, but it is the truth.
Spade: (Do) you mean last night? What else could I do? I had
to throw in with her. I don't know where the bird is and neither
do you. She does. How are we gonna get it if I don't play along
with her?
Cairo: You always have a very smooth explanation ready, huh?
Spade: What do you want me to do - learn to stutter?
Cairo was roughed up during questioning in the all-night
police grilling, but he didn't talk - except to repeat Spade's unreasonable
and 'goofy' story ("I adhered to the course you indicated earlier
in your rooms...I distinctly felt like an idiot repeating it").
[He also searched and ransacked Brigid's apartment during the night
- while she was spending the night with Spade.] He pleads to be left
alone so that he won't be further mussed up.
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